Japan

Japanese Internment Camps- Tori Lee,Josie Hovland

By tortor
  • Pearl Harbor

    Pearl Harbor
    On December 7th, 1941 U.S was attacked by the Japanese in Hawii in a suprise military attack. The base was attacked by 353 Japanese fighters. Four out of eight ships sunk. This attack led into World War Two.
  • Period: to

    Japanese Internment Camps

  • executive order 9066

    executive order 9066
    The executive order of 9066 was signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt on Febuary 19,1942 allowed military leaders to designate military areas at their discretion whitch all people may be excluded. These evculsion zones made it able for military leaders to choose weather citizen or non-citizen.
  • They make internment camps.

    They make internment camps.
    They make internment camps in California, Oregon, Washington, and Arizona for the Japanese imagrants.
  • executive order of 9066 and related actions

    executive order of 9066 and related actions
    Executive Order 9095 created the Office of the Alien Property Custodian, and gave it discretionary, plenary authority over all alien property interests. Many assets were frozen, creating immediate financial difficulty for the affected aliens, preventing most from moving out of the exclusion zones.
  • public proclamation

    Public proclamation number 3 declares an 8:00pm to 6;00 am curfew for all enemys and all peple of japanese ancestory within the miliotary areas.
  • Japanese americans want money

    Japanese americans want money
    The Japanese American Citizen Leages of Northern California-Western Navada District Council asked congress to give individual reimbursement for the time they were in jail, tax free.
  • japanese american rights

    japanese american rights
    This proposes a direct fee of $15,000 per victem and a fee of $15 a day.
  • public hearing in D.C.

    public hearing in D.C.
    The commission of wartime relocation interment of civilians holds a public hearing in washinton,D.C
  • CWRIC

    individual payments of $20,000 to each of those who spent time in the interment camps that are still alive.
  • H.R. 442 is signed

    H.R. 442 is signed
    H.R. 442 is signed by president Ronald Reagan. States that an individual payment of $20,000 to each surviving internee and a $1.25 billion education fund.